Telephone based self-management support for vascular conditions via non-healthcare professionals: a...

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Telephone based self-management support for vascular conditions via non-healthcare professionals: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Dr Nicola Small, Greater Manchester Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC), Research Associate.

Centre for Primary Care, and Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, University of Manchester.

Today

• Context– Vascular self-management support– CLAHRC Randomised Controlled Trial

• Systematic review• Results• Principal findings• Implications• Acknowledgements

Background

• Prevention of vascular disease• Chronic Care Model• Assessing cardiovascular risk• Effective self-management support

Self-management support via non-healthcare professionals

• Reach socially disadvantaged populations

Lay health workers “… have no formal professional or paraprofessional education… broad in scope, includes community health workers, village health workers…” (Lewin, 2005)

Peer support workers “… share salient target population similarities such as age or health concern…” (Dale, 2009)

Telephone support• Efficacy delivering self-management

support via telephone• 2 Cochrane reviews• Telephone support (n = 7) • Peer delivered to differing chronic + acute conditions • Improvements in self-management outcomes• Telemedicine + telephone support (n = 25)• Peer + HCP delivered to chronic heart failure • Reductions in hospitalisations + healthcare costs

Randomised Controlled Trial

• 2 Arm; CKD (Stage 3); • 440 Patients from General Practices in Greater Manchester

‘Does a complex intervention improve self-management and blood pressure control compared to usual CKD management?’

BRinging Information and Guided Help Together (BRIGHT) Self-Management Support Intervention

MRC Complex Intervention Framework

• Coherent theoretical basis• Based on evidence• Implementation• Effective or cost-effective

Aim• Systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the evidence on the effectiveness and

cost effectiveness of telephone self-management interventions for patients with vascular conditions via non-healthcare professionals

Method• Established guidelines for reviews (Higgins, 2008)• Brief RCT Search Strategy for CENTRAL • Study quality (Risk of bias)• Meta-analysis (Standardised mean difference)

Criteria

• Randomised Controlled Trials• Adults with vascular or associated vascular condition• Structured self-management (DoH) telephone support

based on verbal communication only• Self-management telephone support was

both primary (main component) +distinct (effects could be distinguished)

• Delivered via non-healthcare professional

• Calls not supportive in content• Calls were patient initiated• Telemedicine (e.g. storage + transmission

of data)

Study flow• Total studies = 5780

MEDLINE 1987 studies

CENTRAL 1172 studies

19 articles

18 articles

10 (CENTRAL duplicates)

10Met criteria

9 (CENTRAL duplicates)

Total of 10 studies included

EMBASE 2621 studies

9 excluded

405 excluded

9 excluded

415 articles

Characteristics

Included studies: 10

Published: 2005 - 2012

Country: 7 USA; 2 UK; 1 Canada

Design: 9 Individually randomised; 1 Clustered

Participants: 7 Diabetes; 2 Heart disease, 1 Hypertension

Interventions: 7 ‘peer’; 3 ‘lay health workers’

Training: 10 Motivational interviewing, behaviour change theory (self-efficacy, social support)

Study quality

Randomsequence

Allocation concealment

Blinding participants

Blinding outcome

Incomplete outcome

Selective reporting

Turner (√) (?) (√) (√) (√) (X)

Walker (√) (?) (X) (X) (√) (X)

Heisler (√) (√) (X) (?) (√) (X)

Dale (?) (X) (X) (?) (?) (X)

Samuel (√) (X) (X) (?) (√) (?)

Parry (√) (√) (X) (?) (√) (?)

Batik (X) (?) (X) (?) (?) (?)

Carroll (?) (?) (X) (?) (?) (?)

Young (√) (√) (?) (?) (√) (?)

Keyserling (√) (X) (X) (X) (√) (X)

Self-management support

NOTE: Weights are from random effects analysis

Overall (I-squared = 1.8%, p = 0.411)

Study

Samuel

Parry

Carroll

Dale

Heisler

Keyserling

Turner

Outcome

Physical activity

Rehab participation

Rehab participation

Self-efficacy

Diabetes social support

Diet control of blood glucose

Medication taking

0.26 (0.13, 0.39)

ES (95% CI)

0.18 (-0.16, 0.52)

0.48 (-0.13, 1.08)

0.32 (0.01, 0.63)

0.18 (-0.14, 0.50)

0.38 (0.12, 0.64)

0.96 (0.10, 1.81)

0.09 (-0.17, 0.35)

100.00

Weight

13.99

4.50

%

16.87

15.58

23.42

2.22

23.43

0.26 (0.13, 0.39)

ES (95% CI)

0.18 (-0.16, 0.52)

0.48 (-0.13, 1.08)

0.32 (0.01, 0.63)

0.18 (-0.14, 0.50)

0.38 (0.12, 0.64)

0.96 (0.10, 1.81)

0.09 (-0.17, 0.35)

100.00

Weight

13.99

4.50

%

16.87

15.58

23.42

2.22

23.43

0-.5 .5 1

Mental health quality of life

NOTE: Weights are from random effects analysis

Overall (I-squared = 0.0%, p = 0.622)

Keyserling

Study

Samuel

Heisler

Parry

Dale

Mental Well-Being

Outcome

MCS (SF-36)

Diabetes distress

MCS (SF-36V2)

Diabetes distress

0.03 (-0.12, 0.18)

0.04 (-0.32, 0.40)

ES (95% CI)

0.13 (-0.25, 0.50)

0.11 (-0.15, 0.37)

-0.26 (-0.67, 0.14)

0.02 (-0.30, 0.34)

100.00

17.04

Weight

15.29

32.75

13.34

21.58

%

0.03 (-0.12, 0.18)

0.04 (-0.32, 0.40)

ES (95% CI)

0.13 (-0.25, 0.50)

0.11 (-0.15, 0.37)

-0.26 (-0.67, 0.14)

0.02 (-0.30, 0.34)

100.00

17.04

Weight

15.29

32.75

13.34

21.58

%

0-.5 .5 1

Clinical (HBA1c)

NOTE: Weights are from random effects analysis

Overall (I-squared = 50.0%, p = 0.091)

Dale 2008

Walker 2011

Study

Heisler 2010

Samuel-Hodge 2009

Young 2005

HbA1c

HbA1c

Outcome

HbA1c

HbA1c

HbA1c response <1%

-0.27 (-0.43, -0.11)

0.08 (-0.23, 0.38)

-0.25 (-0.44, -0.06)

ES (95% CI)

-0.32 (-0.59, -0.05)

-0.53 (-0.83, -0.22)

-0.32 (-0.56, -0.09)

-0.27 (-0.43, -0.11)

0.08 (-0.23, 0.38)

-0.25 (-0.44, -0.06)

ES (95% CI)

-0.32 (-0.59, -0.05)

-0.53 (-0.83, -0.22)

-0.32 (-0.56, -0.09)

Comparison Community intervention 0-.5 0 .5

Principal findings

• Primarily based in community settings; USA; Diabetes; ‘Peer’ support workers

• Small effects on self-management + HBA1c; • No effect on mental health; Limited data on health

care utilisation + cost-effectiveness• Limited in scope + quality• Unable to assess type or intensity of

self-management support

Implications

• Assume commonalities across vascular disorders• 40% Diabetes patients have associated CKD • Limited evidence of impact on other outcomes• Insufficient data to inform development of interventions

to assess effect on outcomes• Need for well designed trials in vascular population

• Until then... remain dependent on theoretical considerations + patient experience studies

Acknowledgements

Co authors:

Christian Blickem1

Tom Blakeman1

Maria Panagioti1

Carolyn A. Chew-Graham2

Peter Bower1

BRIGHT team: People with Long-Term Conditions Theme1

Greater Manchester Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health

Research and Care, Centre for Primary Care, Manchester Academic

Health Science Centre, University of Manchester1

Research Institute Primary Care and Health Sciences, Keele University2